Related Vacation Book Subjects: Tennessee
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Morgan", sorted by average review score:

Alexandria: A History and a Guide
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (January, 1987)
Authors: Lawrence Durrell and Edward Morgan Forster
Average review score:

Considered best guide book ever written; should be reissued.
Recently read and used this book while in Alexandria. There is essential information, beautifully organized, presented and written that should be available. Introduction by Lawrence Durrell is wonderful too.


All Things Under the Moon
Published in Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (July, 1994)
Authors: Robert Morgan and Robert Morgan
Average review score:

Sam Spade meets Dr. Strange!
A fast paced detective adventure with just enough horror/supernatural to remind you of Ken Robinson's Doc Savage


America Loves Salads
Published in Hardcover by Outlet (November, 1993)
Authors: Camille Cusumano, Camille Cusumano, and Judy Morgan
Average review score:

Healthy Delicious
Green and Vegetable Salads; Scrumptious Main Dish Salads, Special Pasta, Grain and Legume Salads, Fruit Salads - 101 all-Time Best recipes


Analytical Lexicon of Navajo
Published in Hardcover by University of New Mexico Press (January, 1992)
Authors: Robert W. Young, William Morgan, and Sally Midgette
Average review score:

Indispensible
This book is not terribly easy to use. But that's because Navajo is not terribly easy to speak -- or (looking at it the other way) to analyze. So I caution readers that they should spend some time learning the organization of the lexicon before they expect to be able to use it fluently.

However, this book is /the/ must-own book for anyone who studies Navajo language or culture. Its thoroughness (somewhere over twenty-five thousand entries, I think) is astounding.


Animals Helping With Special Needs (Animals That Help Us)
Published in School & Library Binding by Franklin Watts, Incorporated (March, 2000)
Authors: Clare Oliver and Sally Morgan
Average review score:

Great for Kids and Adults Alike
This book is a wonderful book for kids who want to learn more about ways that animals help people. It uses vocabualry appropriate for children. It is not to in depthe so as to lose the child's interst but is [acked full of information. The adults who may read this to their children will learn alot at the same time.


The Aquatic Ape
Published in Hardcover by Stein & Day Pub (April, 1984)
Author: Elaine Morgan
Average review score:

The Aquatic Ape: A Theory of Human Evolution
The Aquatic Ape: A Theory of Human Evolution written by Elaine Morgan is an interesting book about human evolution with an unique twist.

Imagine, if you will, in the course of human evolution, what if man had to adapt to an aquatic existance for a period of time before again returning to land. This is the theory put forth by the author. This theory was first propounded by Professor Alister Hardy. He laid the foundation for his theory by comparing man to other animals and asking questions. Some of these question were very basic, why does man walk upright, why is man naked, why does man have an aquired language, why does man shed tears, and why does man have a different sexual behavior than other primates. All of these questions and more are basic to evolution.

Now, if you compare man to aquatic mammals, these questions will start to have answers in comparative anatomy. But, where to you find the evidence to link an aquatic adaptation in man's past? Well, the author does some good ol' detective work and came up with some answers. There are parts of Africa, more precisely the Nubian, Arabian, and Somalian plates around the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

I found the book to be an easy well-written read that is engagingly clever. But, the questions that it raises have answers that are very compelling to the theory of some aquatic evolutionary history, which is hard to iqnore.


Arco 7 Minute Resumes: Build the Perfect Resume One 7-Minute Lesson at a Time
Published in Paperback by Arco Pub (February, 2000)
Author: Dana Morgan
Average review score:

easy guide for writing resumes
This book is easy to use when writing any kind of resume--from entry level jobs to senior management positions. The guidelines are helpful and easy to follow, and there are lots of examples to help you envision your resume as a finished product. It gives you insight into the way hiring managers think, and offers current views of what employment managers want to see in today's resumes.


Art and Eskimo Power: The Life and Times of Alaskan Howard Rock
Published in Hardcover by Epicenter Press (January, 1992)
Author: Lael Morgan
Average review score:

A courageous Eskimo journalist
The shaman predicted that Howard Rock would become a great man. He was born in 1911 in a sod igloo in Point Hope, an ancient Eskimo village in northwest Alaska where the people had hunted whales and lived off the land for centuries. Instead of becoming a hunter, Howard became an accomplished artist and crusading newspaper editor. He helped defend his people from a controversial Atomic Energy Commission proposal to excavate a harbor near the village with an above-ground atomic blast. Then Rock founded the Tundra Times and helped Alaska's Native people press their aboriginal land claims before Congress, ultimately winning a settlement. Deeply moving.


Art in Bloom
Published in Hardcover by Deseret Equity - Publishing Division (July, 1997)
Authors: Victoria Jane Ream, Sjur Fedje, and Ron Morgan
Average review score:

World's Only book on interpreting paintings w/floral design
Luscious photographs from 18 U.S.museums & home interiors, 150 floral designers explain their flower selections & arrangement symbolism. This 20yr trend in art museum special events gets thorough presentation. Author tips on creating ART IN BLOOM at home are superb. This is THE book!


Art into Ideas : Essays on Conceptual Art
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (June, 1996)
Author: Robert C. Morgan
Average review score:

Art for the Future
Although this is a book about the historical development of that fertile field in Art called "Conceptual", it is really a ground work on understanding and using the ideas found in the history of the field for use on computers and telecomunications devices.

The essays gathered here will give the reader much to think about in how they perceive Art and Technology and the philosophical basis for a new aesthetics.

Once thought passe, the reader will find that the foundations of Conceptual Art is alive and well, and that it is anything but passe with our relationships to new developing technologies.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Tennessee
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